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Shohei Ohtani pulled from start after apparent injury
Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) walks off the field at the end of the second inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park. Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

The Los Angeles Dodgers may be back in “uh-oh” territory with Shohei Ohtani.

While serving as the starting pitcher on Wednesday against the Cincinnati Reds, Ohtani had to exit the game in the middle of an at-bat. During the fourth inning at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati, Ohtani fired six straight balls that weren’t even close to the strike zone (including two wild pitches). Dodgers personnel then huddled around Ohtani, and the decision was made to pull him from the game.

Here is the video, in which Ohtani looked visibly frustrated as he walked off the mound.

The Athletic's Fabian Ardaya later said that Ohtani left Wednesday's start with cramping issues.

Ohtani was at 51 pitches thrown at the time that he exited. Notably however, Ohtani remained in the game for the Dodgers as a hitter. He took his very next at-bat in the top of the sixth inning against Cincinnati’s Nick Martinez and ended up striking out on seven pitches.

Meanwhile, the concerning sequence of the six straight balls thrown by Ohtani right before he left the game as a pitcher can be seen below.

Though Ohtani was at 96-99 mph on all of the pitches in that sequence, it certainly didn’t look good that he was missing by that much. Wednesday also marked just Ohtani’s seventh start of the season since his 2023 UCL surgery (he didn’t pitch at all for the Dodgers in 2024). He has ramped up from one inning pitched per start in his first handful of appearances, to two innings per start by July, up to three in his most recent starts and made it into the fourth inning during Wednesday’s game against Cincinnati.

The Dodgers were extremely cautious throughout Ohtani’s lengthy rehab process, and he certainly looked to be almost all the way recovered, recently having even thrown the fastest pitch of his MLB career

But now the Dodgers could have a new injury concern with Ohtani that is might threaten to derail their plan for him to be at full strength as a pitcher by the 2025 postseason.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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